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      • Paul H. Brookes Publishing Co.

        Brookes Publishing is an independent publisher based in Baltimore, Maryland, USA. For more than 40 years, Brookes has been a leading provider of professional resources and assessments in early childhood, communication and language, education (particularly special education), and disability. Brookes Publishing is committed to bettering lives and outcomes for all people.

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      • Hawker Brownlow Education

        Hawker Brownlow Education, a Solution Tree company, is Australasia’s leading provider of educational resources, events and professional development services. Since 1985, we have empowered F–12 teachers and educational professionals with the tools and skills they need to improve classrooms and raise student achievement. From our head office in Melbourne, we publish the latest and best-regarded educational thinking from around the region and the world, releasing over 300 new titles and printing over 100 000 publications each year to support educational professionals. Our publications can be found on the shelves of over 9200 schools across Australia and New Zealand, in addition to reaching educational professionals in over 50 countries globally. We train and inspire thousands of educational professionals through major annual conferences, regional events and in-school support, delivering over 2000 hours of professional development each year. For more, visit www.hbe.com.au and follow @HawkerBrownlow on Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and LinkedIn.

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      • November 2018

        The Economy of Enough

        Unlocking the Secret to Happily Ever After

        by Bronwen Sciortino

        Never put off being kind to yourself again. What if you could go from feeling like the worst person in the world to stepping into happily ever after? How about in the time it takes you to read this book? ‘You’re useless.…’ ‘You’re so dumb…’ ‘How could you be so stupid?’ How many times have you said these things to yourself? Probably multiple times a day, every day of your life, if this describes how you feel about yourself:• Never have a kind word for yourself• Easily find ways you could have done something better• Have a foreboding sense of resignation that you’ll never get anything ‘right’• Hold yourself to much higher standards than everyone else • Nothing you ever do is ‘good enough’ In her latest book, award-winning businesswoman Bronwen Sciortino unlocks the secret to happily ever after and shares practical and easy steps to allow you to experience the same love and commitment you give to everyone around you.From exhausted to exulted, this book reveals just how easily you can infuse your life with outrageous happiness, love and laughter – using an easy to follow process and with loads of ease and grace. The world is waiting for you to become the magnificent person you were always supposed to be. Let’s be real. There are no ‘miracle’ cures that work without applying attention. But there are simple and practical steps you can easily take to move your life in a different direction. Infused with all the ‘downloads’ you need to catapult your life differently, The Economy of Enough is the golden nugget you’ve been waiting for to understand exactly what you need to be happy.

      • May 2020

        Conflict and Negotiation in the Early Church

        Letters from Late Antiquity, Translated from the Greek, Latin, and Syriac

        by Bronwen Neil, Pauline Allen

        Recent decades have seen great progress made in scholarship towards understanding the major civic role played by bishops of the eastern and western churches of Late Antiquity. Brownen Neil and Pauline Allen explore and evaluate one aspect of this civic role, the negotiation of religious conflict.Conflict and Negotiation in the Early Church focuses on the period 500 to 700 CE, one of the least documented periods in the history of the church, but also one of the most formative, whose conflicts resonate still in contemporary Christian communities, especially in the Middle East.To uncover the hidden history of this period and its theological controversies, Neil and Allen have tapped a little known written source, the letters that were exchanged by bishops, emperors and other civic leaders of the sixth and seventh centuries. This was an era of crisis for the Byzantine empire, at war first with Persia, and then with the Arab forces united under the new faith of Islam. Official letters were used by the churches of Rome and Constantinople to pursue and defend their claims to universal and local authority, a constant source of conflict. As well as the east-west struggle, Christological disagreements with the Syrian church demanded increasing attention from the episcopal and imperial rulers in Constantinople, even as Rome set itself adrift and looked to the West for new allies.From this troubled period, 1500 letters survive in Greek, Latin, and Syriac. With translations of a number of these, many rendered into English for the first time, Conflict and Negotiation in the Early Church examines the ways in which diplomatic relations between churches were developed, and in some cases hindered or even permanently ruptured, through letter-exchange at the end of Late Antiquity.

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